On Wednesday, Madigan spokesman Steve Brown said the speaker would block Quinn’s efforts to eliminate the program through an amendatory veto.

Madigan believes Quinn was violating the Illinois Constitution by rewriting legislation aimed at blocking state lawmakers from giving tuition waivers to relatives.

Madigan has voted before to get rid of the program, but Brown said the speaker would not let the House vote on whether to accept Quinn’s amendatory veto because the governor’s move was unconstitutional.

Quinn said Thursday that he’s disappointed with Madigan’s position and he wants lawmakers to abolish the program when they return to Springfield for the fall veto session.

The scholarship program has been criticized for years as lawmakers have handed out tuition waivers to family members, friends and students with ties to campaign contributors – in some cases skirting rules against giving the tuition waivers to people outside their districts.